Comments for Need Work Camper

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You may want to rethink your offer. Expecting a workamper to work three or four days for an RV site and electricity is asking for a lot. If you are in a very desirable location, or if your park has exceptional amenities, it may be fine.

If the RVer works for site and electric for three or four days, and works a standard five day week, that only leaves him one day to earn enough to cover all of his other expenses -- food, clothing, insurance, RV and other vehicle, phone and other utilities, medical care, gifts, savings and retirement, entertainment, etc.

If I recall correctly, finance experts recommend that housing expenses be no more than 30 percent of a person's income. Using that figure, it would be 12 hours work for housing. That would need to include the RV and its upkeep, as well as the site to park it on.

Wanting Too Much

Amen to the last responder. Employers in this field don't have a clue. But, they wonder why they can't get or keep anyone. Just put pen to paper, divide a month's lot rent by hours and see you want to pay an adult less than minimum wage. I'll just keep looking 'till I find a good owner and I'll stay with them. Larry 989-670-3910

Workers On Wheels is our website and newsletter about working while RVing -- working
while living in a home on wheels. There are so many kinds of work to do while
RVing and camping (what some campers call workcamping or work camping). We help
RV workers -- whether snowbirds or full-time RVers -- find campground
jobs, volunteer jobs, jobs with RV spaces, seasonal jobs, mobile employment, short-term paid employment, and
other ways to earn an income and cut expenses while enjoying life in a recreational vehicle. Thanks for visiting our WOW website! ~ Coleen
and Bob, your Workers On Wheels editors, at work-for-RVers-and-campers.com